Personal Lists featuring...

Asako I & II 2018

2

list auto imported from imdb by https://github.com/cecobask/imdb-trakt-sync on Thu, 19 Jan 2023 08:16:05 -03

362

Essential melancholy for people who'd love to bedew in sadness, full of contemplation as we then witness these characters at their crossroads. Moody, brutal and brooding but not entirely devoid of wonder.

360

Movies that are equivalent to dream-pop, shoegaze music - They possess an ethereal emptiness…

5

Palme d'Or: Shoplifters by Hirokazu Kore-eda
Grand Prix: BlacKkKlansman by Spike Lee
Best Director: Paweł Pawlikowski for Cold War
Jury Prize: Capernaum by Nadine Labaki
Best Screenplay:
- Alice Rohrwacher for Happy as Lazzaro
- Jafar Panahi and Nader Saeivar for 3 Faces
Best Actress: Samal Yeslyamova for Ayka
Best Actor: Marcello Fonte for Dogman
Special Palme d'Or: The Image Book by Jean-Luc Godard

5

Films shown at San Diego Asian Film Festival 2018

Source: https://sdaff.org/2018/films/

Missing:
MYSTERY KUNG FU THEATER
TO KILL ALICE
BETWEEN TIDES
THE ISLAND

10

Source: https://editorial.rottentomatoes.com/guide/best-movies-of-2019/

3

things I seen from my watchlist

31

About a month ago, The A.V. Club counted down its favorite movies of the 2010s. Even at 100 selections, the list couldn’t hope to capture the full scope of 10 years of cinema—as plenty were eager to inform us, we excluded tons of notable movies, dammit. Who knows how our decade rundown will age from here, but one thing does seem certain already: It will look woefully light on the great movies of 2019. Whether through a reluctance to call something a masterpiece too quickly or because they just hadn’t yet seen all the pertinent triumphs, our contributors went light on films from the past few months. (Call it the opposite of recency bias.) And those absences will stick out, because just one month later, it’s now fully clear what a powerhouse year it’s been for movies—for space odysseys and class-warfare thrillers, for romances fated and doomed, for the anxieties of aging directors becoming very aware of their age. So don’t just think of the list below, reflecting the individual tastes and consensus favorites of our 13 ballot-filing critics, as a salute to what 2019 had to offer theatergoers and streamers. Also think of it as an asterisk on that 2010s retrospective, celebrating the films we knew were great then and—in the case of our late-breaking #1 of the year—the ones we’ve rallied around since.

https://film.avclub.com/the-25-best-films-of-2019-1840420094

24

Hollywood is not having a banner year. Even if one ignores the recent string of critically drubbed, commercially neglected sequels, the last six months haven’t offered much in the way of exceptional studio movies—though they’ve certainly delivered a few obscenely profitable ones. The good news is that no one has to depend only on Hollywood for a fix of first-rate cinema. As usual, there was plenty of it be found outside of the multiplex, even for those without, say, a Drafthouse or a Landmark in driving distance. (Got a wifi connection? Your living room can become a miniature art house for the evening.) To mark the midway point of 2019, The A.V. Club has gone back chronologically through the last few months, beginning in January, and singled out our favorites, noting how and where they can be watched. The unranked list below, a kind of catch-up guide to the year in movies so far, includes a sex comedy, a Netflix sports drama, an avant-garde essay from a living legend, a famous concert performed by a dead legend, and a space odyssey starring our future Batman. And yeah, we made a little room for Hollywood, too. How big of Us.

https://film.avclub.com/the-best-films-of-2019-so-far-1835652186

3

La même chose mais en 2019

86

2018 Lisbon & Sintra Film Festival:
- 01-10: Out of competition
- 11-19: In Competition.

Loading...